Ty Segall & The Muggers - "Live" "At" "The" "BBC"
Release date is January 30.
------------
Flash back, to a time of big men and bigger babies! A time not unlike today ā but what, simpler-like? Shit. January, 2016. The times: scary. Tomorrow: kiss it goodbye. This was the headspace for Emotional Muggerās necksnapping sketch when it dropped that very month those ten fateful years ago. Off the back of 2014ās expansive Manipulator and the months of touring that followed, Ty was down to party with whatever extreme, flipped-script scene came welling up through him. Emotional Mugger, its forked tongue stuffed in deep cheek, landed the jump, putting the āsickā back into āsatiricā and the āthe fuh!?!ā back into āFUN!ā, featuring eleven of the most rancid & monstrous cuts in the Segall catalog EVEN AS OF TODAY ā sequenced, as ever, with an almost mystic third eye/ear predilection for the immaculate distribution of album gravity.
The fun didnāt stop there. Tyād played most of the parts on the album, excepting some key drop-ins from close associates, including Wandās Cory Hanson and Evan Burrows, The Cairo Gangās Emmett Kelly, Mikal Cronin and King Tuff himself, Kyle Thomas. The vibes were so right with this crew, he dubbed them The Muggers, stretched a rubber baby mask over his head (with extra space sliced out for his mouth to scream through), and they all hit the road a few weeks in front of the album, rolling over the US through the end of March, then heading to Europe for some more.
Thatās when "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC" happened.
They were cutting thru the UK, four shows in five days ā just enough time for a Mark Riley session for the BBC! It would be childās play, in more ways than one. Fifty shows into it, The Muggers were in full-on road mode, their five-headed monstrosity fully backing Ty ā who for perhaps the only time in all his years of touring ā carried only a mic, to focus all his energy on singing. Here, he leads the charge, his pipes deeply tanned, but otherwise unfettered from their nightly regimen. Hammering out a nineteen minute slice of their regular show, he & The Muggersā free spirits can be heard in EVERY SINGLE MOMENT, with special weirdness coming whenever Cory, Emmett, Mikal and Kyle all chip in on backing vocals. The room feels like barely enough to contain all their shit as they smash through four choice Emotional Mugger cuts and one ostensible finger-in-the-eye, their telescoped take-out of The Doorsā āL.A. Woman.ā Blues, yeah! It sounds, a decade hence, like the Black Flag version that never was. Now itās The Muggersā version that will ALWAYS be.
Yup ā undeniably hot stuff. What took us so long to get this out? Who knows, maybe the etching? Thatās right, one side has all the music, the other sideās got a rendering of the babyman mask thatās haunted so many punters over long nights of the soul since then. Relive the trauma, and yer sure to dig "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC".
What else is there to say? Other than, all-together-now, āJohn Wayne was a bad, bad man!ā
Track list:
SIDE A
1. Squealer
2. Breakfast Eggs
3. Emotional Mugger
4. Candy Sam
5. L.A. Woman
SIDE B
etching
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Shipping & Returns


Ty Segall & The Muggers - "Live" "At" "The" "BBC"
Ty Segall & The Muggers - "Live" "At" "The" "BBC"
Release date is January 30.
------------
Flash back, to a time of big men and bigger babies! A time not unlike today ā but what, simpler-like? Shit. January, 2016. The times: scary. Tomorrow: kiss it goodbye. This was the headspace for Emotional Muggerās necksnapping sketch when it dropped that very month those ten fateful years ago. Off the back of 2014ās expansive Manipulator and the months of touring that followed, Ty was down to party with whatever extreme, flipped-script scene came welling up through him. Emotional Mugger, its forked tongue stuffed in deep cheek, landed the jump, putting the āsickā back into āsatiricā and the āthe fuh!?!ā back into āFUN!ā, featuring eleven of the most rancid & monstrous cuts in the Segall catalog EVEN AS OF TODAY ā sequenced, as ever, with an almost mystic third eye/ear predilection for the immaculate distribution of album gravity.
The fun didnāt stop there. Tyād played most of the parts on the album, excepting some key drop-ins from close associates, including Wandās Cory Hanson and Evan Burrows, The Cairo Gangās Emmett Kelly, Mikal Cronin and King Tuff himself, Kyle Thomas. The vibes were so right with this crew, he dubbed them The Muggers, stretched a rubber baby mask over his head (with extra space sliced out for his mouth to scream through), and they all hit the road a few weeks in front of the album, rolling over the US through the end of March, then heading to Europe for some more.
Thatās when "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC" happened.
They were cutting thru the UK, four shows in five days ā just enough time for a Mark Riley session for the BBC! It would be childās play, in more ways than one. Fifty shows into it, The Muggers were in full-on road mode, their five-headed monstrosity fully backing Ty ā who for perhaps the only time in all his years of touring ā carried only a mic, to focus all his energy on singing. Here, he leads the charge, his pipes deeply tanned, but otherwise unfettered from their nightly regimen. Hammering out a nineteen minute slice of their regular show, he & The Muggersā free spirits can be heard in EVERY SINGLE MOMENT, with special weirdness coming whenever Cory, Emmett, Mikal and Kyle all chip in on backing vocals. The room feels like barely enough to contain all their shit as they smash through four choice Emotional Mugger cuts and one ostensible finger-in-the-eye, their telescoped take-out of The Doorsā āL.A. Woman.ā Blues, yeah! It sounds, a decade hence, like the Black Flag version that never was. Now itās The Muggersā version that will ALWAYS be.
Yup ā undeniably hot stuff. What took us so long to get this out? Who knows, maybe the etching? Thatās right, one side has all the music, the other sideās got a rendering of the babyman mask thatās haunted so many punters over long nights of the soul since then. Relive the trauma, and yer sure to dig "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC".
What else is there to say? Other than, all-together-now, āJohn Wayne was a bad, bad man!ā
Track list:
SIDE A
1. Squealer
2. Breakfast Eggs
3. Emotional Mugger
4. Candy Sam
5. L.A. Woman
SIDE B
etching
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Release date is January 30.
------------
Flash back, to a time of big men and bigger babies! A time not unlike today ā but what, simpler-like? Shit. January, 2016. The times: scary. Tomorrow: kiss it goodbye. This was the headspace for Emotional Muggerās necksnapping sketch when it dropped that very month those ten fateful years ago. Off the back of 2014ās expansive Manipulator and the months of touring that followed, Ty was down to party with whatever extreme, flipped-script scene came welling up through him. Emotional Mugger, its forked tongue stuffed in deep cheek, landed the jump, putting the āsickā back into āsatiricā and the āthe fuh!?!ā back into āFUN!ā, featuring eleven of the most rancid & monstrous cuts in the Segall catalog EVEN AS OF TODAY ā sequenced, as ever, with an almost mystic third eye/ear predilection for the immaculate distribution of album gravity.
The fun didnāt stop there. Tyād played most of the parts on the album, excepting some key drop-ins from close associates, including Wandās Cory Hanson and Evan Burrows, The Cairo Gangās Emmett Kelly, Mikal Cronin and King Tuff himself, Kyle Thomas. The vibes were so right with this crew, he dubbed them The Muggers, stretched a rubber baby mask over his head (with extra space sliced out for his mouth to scream through), and they all hit the road a few weeks in front of the album, rolling over the US through the end of March, then heading to Europe for some more.
Thatās when "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC" happened.
They were cutting thru the UK, four shows in five days ā just enough time for a Mark Riley session for the BBC! It would be childās play, in more ways than one. Fifty shows into it, The Muggers were in full-on road mode, their five-headed monstrosity fully backing Ty ā who for perhaps the only time in all his years of touring ā carried only a mic, to focus all his energy on singing. Here, he leads the charge, his pipes deeply tanned, but otherwise unfettered from their nightly regimen. Hammering out a nineteen minute slice of their regular show, he & The Muggersā free spirits can be heard in EVERY SINGLE MOMENT, with special weirdness coming whenever Cory, Emmett, Mikal and Kyle all chip in on backing vocals. The room feels like barely enough to contain all their shit as they smash through four choice Emotional Mugger cuts and one ostensible finger-in-the-eye, their telescoped take-out of The Doorsā āL.A. Woman.ā Blues, yeah! It sounds, a decade hence, like the Black Flag version that never was. Now itās The Muggersā version that will ALWAYS be.
Yup ā undeniably hot stuff. What took us so long to get this out? Who knows, maybe the etching? Thatās right, one side has all the music, the other sideās got a rendering of the babyman mask thatās haunted so many punters over long nights of the soul since then. Relive the trauma, and yer sure to dig "LIVE" "AT" "THE" "BBC".
What else is there to say? Other than, all-together-now, āJohn Wayne was a bad, bad man!ā
Track list:
SIDE A
1. Squealer
2. Breakfast Eggs
3. Emotional Mugger
4. Candy Sam
5. L.A. Woman
SIDE B
etching
















